Vyasa Advises Dhritarashtra to Restrain DuryodhanaVyasa, the sage who fathered both the Pandavas and the Kauravas, comes to Dhritarashtra with a direct warning: the Pandavas have been cheated and exiled, and when their thirteen years are over, they will return in fury. He tells the blind king to restrain Duryodhana — or send him to live with his cousins in the forest, so that affection might grow where hatred now lives.
Krishna Regrets His Absence During the GamblingKrishna arrives in the forest and tells Yudhishthira that everything that happened — the gambling, the loss of the kingdom, the exile — could have been prevented if he had been present. He describes exactly what he would have done: spoken gently first, then used force. His absence from Dvaraka, he says, was the single cause of all their misfortunes.
Yudhishthira Discourses on Anger and ForgivenessDraupadi has urged Yudhishthira to act with anger against Suyodhana, but Yudhishthira refuses. He delivers a sustained philosophical discourse on the destructive nature of anger and the supreme virtue of forgiveness, citing the authority of the sage Kashyapa and the counsel of the elders — concluding that gentleness is his eternal dharma, and that destiny will bring destruction upon Suyodhana if he does not return the kingdom.
Yudhishthira Counsels Patience to BhimasenaBhimasena speaks rashly of attacking Duryodhana. Yudhishthira sighs, reflects, and then lays out the cold truth: Bhishma, Drona, Karna, and the rest cannot be defeated by courage alone. They are armed with divine weapons, loyal to Duryodhana, and backed by a full treasury and a vast army. Bhima, for once, has nothing to say.
Balarama Laments the Pandavas' SufferingThe Vrishnis welcome the Pandavas at Prabhasa, and Balarama sees Yudhishthira — a king who followed dharma — miserable in the forest while Duryodhana prospers. The sight creates a moral paradox he cannot resolve, and he turns to Krishna with a speech that catalogues every injustice and ends with a question the earth itself seems unwilling to answer.
Duryodhana Returns and Resolves to FightAfter being consoled by the daityas and returned to his fasting spot by Kritya, Duryodhana awakens believing it was all a dream — yet a single thought remains lodged in his mind: he will vanquish the Pandavas in battle. His resolve hardens, and he keeps secret the supernatural possession that has overtaken Karna, the Samshaptakas, and even the Kuru elders.
Pandavas Learn of Karna's Vow and Leave DvaitavanaSpies bring word to the Pandavas in the Dvaitavana forest: Karna has vowed to kill Arjuna. Yudhishthira grows deeply anxious. He thinks of Karna's impenetrable armor, of all their difficulties, and decides they must leave the forest at once.
Karna's Origin, Training, and Rivalry with ArjunaKunti learns through a spy that her abandoned firstborn son wears celestial armour. Adhiratha sends the boy to Varanasahrya to learn weapons, where he studies under Drona, Kripa, and Rama, becomes Duryodhana's friend, and locks into a lifelong rivalry with Arjuna that makes Yudhishthira despair.